English Dictionary

Definition of “staging

staging (ˈsteɪdʒɪŋPronunciation for staging

Definitions

noun

  1. any temporary structure used in the process of building, esp the horizontal platforms supported by scaffolding

Word Origin

C14: from stage + -ingC14: from + 1

stage (steɪdʒPronunciation for stage

Definitions

noun

  1. a distinct step or period of development, growth, or progress  ⇒ a child at the toddling stage 
  2. a raised area or platform
  3. the platform in a theatre where actors perform
  4. See the stage
  5. any scene regarded as a setting for an event or action
  6. a portion of a journey or a stopping place after such a portion
  7. short for stagecoach
  8. British a division of a bus route for which there is a fixed fare
  9. one of the separate propulsion units of a rocket that can be jettisoned when it has burnt out See also multistage (sense 1)
  10. any of the various distinct periods of growth or development in the life of an organism, esp an insect  ⇒ a larval stage pupal stage 
  11. the organism itself at such a period of growth
  12. a small stratigraphical unit; a subdivision of a rock series or system
  13. the platform on a microscope on which the specimen is mounted for examination
  14. electronics a part of a complex circuit, esp one of a number of transistors with the associated elements required to amplify a signal in an amplifier
  15. a university subject studied for one academic year  ⇒ Stage II French 
  16. See by easy stages

verb

  1. (tr) to perform (a play), esp on a stage  ⇒ we are going to stage ``Hamlet'' 
  2. (tr) to set the action of (a play) in a particular time or place
  3. (tr) to plan, organize, and carry out (an event)
  4. (intr) obsolete to travel by stagecoach

Word Origin

C13: from Old French estage  position, from Vulgar Latin staticum  (unattested), from Latin stāre to stand

Usage examples

  • By staging his apparent death last night, he pulled off the hounds.
    Higgins, Jack, Confessional (1985)
  • COM's Alan Woodhouse is staging his own Silent Protest today.
    NME (New Musical Express) (2002)
  • But if Lepage's writing is often simplistic, his inventive staging creates evocative images that successfully fill in the blanks.
    Globe and Mail (2003)
  • The latest staging post is the Surbiton tournament, which starts today.
    Glasgow Herald (2001)
  • With no such partnership, musical standards were often more impressive than that of the staging.
    Susie Gilbert and Jay Shir, A TALE OF FOUR HOUSES: Opera at Covent Garden, La Scala, Vienna and the Met since 1945 (2003)

Browse dictionary